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Infertility. --- Infertility --- Stérilité --- Insemination, Artificial --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted
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Infertility --- Infertility --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted. --- Infertility. --- Stérilité --- diagnosis. --- therapy.
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Infertility --- Stérilité --- Infertility --- Infertility --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted. --- Diagnosis --- Diagnostic --- diagnosis. --- therapy.
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Human reproductive technology --- Infertility --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted. --- Infertility --- Treatment Outcome --- Treatment --- therapy.
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Families --- Human reproductive technology --- Medical ethics --- Familles --- Procréation médicalement assistée --- Ethique médicale --- Philosophy --- Philosophie --- Ethics, Medical --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted --- ethics --- Procréation médicalement assistée --- Ethique médicale --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted - ethics
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Elles s'aiment et après des années d'attente, d'espoir et de désespoir, la grossesse est confirmée, un bébé est annoncé. À une joie débordante succèdent les premiers signes cliniques inquiétants. Hospitalisée, elle ne bouge plus, retient sa respiration, regarde des bêtises à la télé et surveille son ventre qui pousse doucement... entre deux flots de sang. Puis c'est l'irréparable : « parfois on se noie dans une mer à boire, aussi rouge qu'un coeur qui cesse de battre ». Le couple devra surmonter la douleur et faire le deuil de cet enfant. Leur amour, l'affection et l'écoute qu'on leur témoigne, puis l'écriture, l'abandon entre imaginaire et réalité, les amèneront vers de nouveaux projets et de nouveaux espoirs.
Procréation médicalement assistée --- Foetus --- Deuil --- Bandes dessinées. --- Mort --- Human reproductive technology --- Fetal death --- Bereavement --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted
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"Is 40 the new 30? Increasing reproductive intentions and fertility rates beyond age 40 Éva Beaujouan and Tomáš Sobotka Acknowledgments: Eva Beaujouan's contribution was funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), project 'Later Fertility in Europe' (Grant agreement no. P31171-G29); The Office for National Statistics provided access to the British General Household Survey series (originally constructed by the ESRC Centre for Population Change). Introduction Across the highly developed countries, reproduction trends of the last half a century are characterised by a continuous shift of parenthood towards higher reproductive ages (1- 3). The trend to later childbearing has been fuelled by a broad array of cultural and social changes such as higher education expansion, rise in gender equality and in women's employment, changes in partnership behaviour, rising economic uncertainty, and shifts in family-related values and attitudes (e.g. 4). Late reproduction has progressed hand in hand with a trend to a smaller family size, with two-child families becoming most prominent with respect to both fertility ideals and actual family size (5,6)"--
Infertility, Female --- Reproductive technology. --- Fertility --- Infertility, Female --- Maternal Age --- Aging --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted --- Pregnancy --- Reproductive Behavior --- Age factors
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Reproductive Techniques, Assisted --- Fertility --- Infertility --- Reproduction --- Reproduction --- Fertility, Human --- Reproduction --- Fecondite --- physiology --- therapy --- physiology --- Congresses --- Congresses --- Congrès --- Congrès
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